You're a sick manand math is fun.
You're a sick manand math is fun.
It is much easier to say that, than to actually do it.
But please, whatever you do don't listen to those of us with experience in other fields and industries. Listen, instead, to Academia as she sings the song of "More $TEM students!!1".
This is only somewhat true. A STEM degree can get one a job in many fields where a liberal arts major does you no good. Some graduate degrees, such as medicine, may not require a science degree but one will need so much science that you will just about have a minor. Other graduate schools such as engineering are difficult without a math/science degree. In business a technical degree such as finance is generally considered more desirable by employers than a business management degree. Even within an industry the lack of certain degrees can be a hinder. I got into military flight school with a history major. Some areas of flight school were not as easy for me as it was for the science majors. In addition, once I graduated some tracks within aviation were closed to me due to my lack of a technical degree.But please, whatever you do don't listen to those of us with experience in other fields and industries. Listen, instead, to Academia as she sings the song of "More $TEM students!!1".
…and parents.
…and kids who are the "Johnny Football Hero" who emphasize sports over education.
Get a math degree. Transferable to almost any discipline, departments are hurting For students and math is fun.
Mathematics is the purest of the sciences.No, math sucks!
I'm not saying for one second it isn't a great deal, just that it isn't easy. But for someone that has any interest in working in semiconductor design, or as a systems engineer, or any related field -- a university education is an absolute requirement. Increased earnings in just a few years easily pays for the degree.
But please, whatever you do don't listen to those of us with experience in other fields and industries. Listen, instead, to Academia as she sings the song of "More $TEM students!!1".
Yes. In my STEM field. That is not in the "tech" part. Which is the field that any "$TEM = fraud" backlash generally seems to come from. Oversaturation of the tech sector, perhaps?Just out of curiosity, would you people collective define yourselves as "happy" and "successful"?
Some thing like less than 10% of college football stars end up in the NFL. But discounting the few stars in high school sports is just a little disingenuous. If you have people scouting you for a college that will offer a full ride (if it happens with either one of my kids, I'll foster their sports as much as possible), then go full throttle with sports and school. It could save you the expense of college for the talent.
But yeah, for the most part, most kids will never see what they expect from high school, or even college sports.
Football is, according to the NCAA 6.5% of high school players will ever play for an NCAA team. And 1.6% of that 6.5% that play for the NCAA will ever play for the NFL. And then 1 in every 6 NFL players go bankrupt fairly quickly.
Much, much better off focusing on academics and academic scholarships I think.
Source
While the world needs artists and writers, the STEM folks are going to be the ones fixing California's water problems and solving global warming.Ehh, I'm a fan of STEM. The more scientists, engineers and mathematicians we're cranking out, we're hopefully going to drive innovation and solve problems through technology.
I think the world has reached its limit on professional bloggers writing listicles for Buzzfeed.
While the world needs artists and writers, the STEM folks are going to be the ones fixing California's water problems and solving global warming.
This is why I joined the dark side and went into sales. It has created many options for me.